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Solids have varying temperatures at which they melt into a liquid. Experiment with chocolate, wax or butter, record, which has the lowest and highest temperature when it melts.
it melts into a liqiud
The lowest temperature on Jupiter is 234.43 degrees
True, a wet rock melts at a lower temperature!
The temperature at which intermolecular forces push the molecules apart
Solids have varying temperatures at which they melt into a liquid. Experiment with chocolate, wax or butter, record, which has the lowest and highest temperature when it melts.
Cause its frosty like snow! Snow melts right?
the heat melts the butter to a liquid. you could put melted butter on popcorn.
The melting point depends on the solder. The lowest I've seen is 395F.
No, they are not. Butter will not go liquid at room temperature, unless it's in a hot room. (In most moderate room temperatures it is still solid). Lard melts an an even higher temperature than butter. Generally it's animal fats that are solid at room temperature.
...butter melts when you warm it up
Chocolate melts because of the temperature around it, therefore, if you put chocolate in the fridge or freezer it doesn't melt, but if you hold it in your hand of put it in the microwave, it does.
Yes, because butter is melting
Because peanut butter, aside from peanuts, is grossly made up of oil. Chocolate gets much harder than peanut butter, thus requiring a much higher temperature to melt.
Butter is a water-in-fat emulsion, when it heats up the fat melts.
they go to heaven
It melts.